babyjax13 wrote:theonlyclutch wrote:jojo4341 wrote:
I think he's referring to best TRUE PG...as in, pass first and running the offense, rather than score-first and reacting to the defense. CP3, Jason Kidd, Rondo, Steve Nash fit this mold.
'Pass-first' PGs as an archetype are obsolete in 2024 lol. In good teams there are often other playmakers who can do the job of scoring and playmaking at the same time. PGs that can't apply good scoring pressure in volume (and that's not Stockton and his career 13 ppg playoffs) just don't get to dominate the ball in a way that is necessary to rack up assist counts like they used to. The closest one is Haliburton and he's still a
significantly more aggressive scorer, especially pre-injury.
I just don't think they are irrelevant. Mike Conley, Chris Paul, and Kyle Lowry have held on for a long, long time by being players of this archetype. That they are still relevant at their ages suggests that it still has value to teams - there just aren't many players of this archetype coming into the league. I would, however, agree with you if a guy is basically Eric Snow - someone with no offensive skill whatsoever.
Kyle Lowry during his prime (Toronto) consistently looked for his own shot and scored more than Stockton despite playing in a significantly slower league, as soon as he left Toronto and stopped being such a scorer the ball was taken off him in Miami and he stopped getting opportunities to generate assists.
Chris Paul...is just a bad comparison given he's a significantly better scorer, better playmaker, and plays like it, and even he stopped dominating the ball as much in Houston/OKC/PHX pared with other playmaking guards. His highest AST % seasons were in NOH over a
decade and a half ago, did he somehow become a worst passer as he matured? No, teams just don't want small guards with the ball in their hands as much if they aren't high-end scorers.
Mike Conley is an apt comparison but also an illustrative one, he never had the opportunities to generate so much assists as he's not on ball nearly as much as Stockton was, given the playmakers he played with (Gasol in MEM, Mitchell in UTA, Edwards in MIN).
Heck, we see this with Stockton himself, as good as he was, the Jazz's best seasons in the playoffs ('94-'98) were with Jeff Hornacek (another playmaker) and Malone taking increased duties there, with less touches to Stockton as a result. And there's exponentially more talented playmakers at every position in the early-20ss than the late-90s, Coaches aren't gonna move Jokic/Luka/Lebron/Sabonis off-ball just so Stockton can pump his assist stats.